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E-raamat: Plants and Politics in Padua During the Age of Revolution, 1820-1848

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This book highlights the close interactions between plants, plant knowledge, politics, and social life in Padua during the age of revolution. It explores the lives and thoughts of two brothers, the lawyer Andrea Meneghini (1806–1870) and the botanist Giuseppe Meneghini (1811–1889), illustrating the world of Padua’s social and intellectual elite in the decades before the 1848 revolution. A closer look at park designs, gardening associations and networks, flower exhibitions, agricultural societies, organicist metaphors, and botanical research on the organization of living bodies opens up unexpected parallels between actors and ideas of two apparently distant areas: botany and political economy. It reveals unspoken dreams of progress and a new social order, but also sheds light on the ambiguous relationship between the Paduan elite and the Austrian rule.

1 Introduction
1(16)
References
14(3)
2 Padua's Networks
17(46)
2.1 The Spirit of Association
22(10)
2.2 Paduan Associations
32(4)
2.3 Plants and Politics in the Gardening Society
36(8)
2.4 Science as an Instrument for Padua's Regional Influence
44(9)
References
53(10)
3 Plants and the Social Ascent of the Meneghini Family
63(12)
3.1 The Rise of the Meneghini Family
63(4)
3.2 Marriage Politics
67(5)
References
72(3)
4 Garden Politics
75(24)
4.1 The Symbolic Role of Gardens
75(4)
4.2 Romantic Landscapes in Padua
79(6)
4.3 The Meneghini Garden
85(8)
References
93(6)
5 Growing Up in a Progressive Environment
99(20)
5.1 Bleeding Polenta
100(2)
5.2 Bernardi's Lessons
102(7)
5.3 Seeking a Place in the Sun
109(5)
References
114(5)
6 Organization, Cooperation, and Progress in Padua's Political Economy
119(46)
6.1 Botany and Political and Economic Philosophies
121(3)
6.2 Perfecting
124(5)
6.3 Patterns of Social Organization
129(8)
6.4 Organic Frameworks
137(10)
6.5 The `Law of Progress'
147(9)
References
156(9)
7 Progress, Evolution, and Cellular Constitution
165(36)
7.1 Patterns of Biological Organization
165(5)
7.2 Degrees of Perfection
170(9)
7.3 "The march of nature is always progressive"
179(9)
7.4 Giuseppe's Mission
188(6)
References
194(7)
8 The Sweeping Power of Horticulture
201(16)
8.1 Flowers in Paduan Culture
201(4)
8.2 The Festival of Flowers
205(7)
References
212(5)
9 Cultivating Land and People
217(44)
9.1 The Agrobotanical Garden of Padua
219(4)
9.2 The Land Is a Garden: Romantic Cultivation
223(12)
9.3 Andrea's Il Tornaconto
235(7)
9.4 "Potatoes!"
242(11)
References
253(8)
10 Revolutions and Their Failures
261(18)
10.1 Padua and the European Appeal
262(2)
10.2 "Meneghini for President!"
264(5)
10.3 Broken Dreams
269(5)
References
274(5)
11 Conclusion
279(6)
Index 285
Ariana Droscher is an independent scholar based in Bologna, Italy.